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What are the composition and properties of fuels, and how are they expressed?

  1. Two systems for "composition"

(A) Elemental analysis (industrial standard: ultimate analysis)
Gives mass fractions of elements in fuel: C,H,O,N,SC,H,O,N,S, plus ash AA and moisture WW. Used for air supply, flue gas volume, heat balance, and emissions accounting.

(B) Industrial analysis (proximate analysis, core for solid fuels)

  • Moisture WW
  • Volatile matter VV
  • Ash AA
  • Fixed carbon FCFC
    Relationship: FC=100FC = 100% - (W+V+A) (on the same basis).
  1. Common "property" indicators (thermotechnical view)
  • Heating value: higher QHHVQ_{HHV}, lower QLHVQ_{LHV} (MJ/kg or kJ/kg)
  • Ignition/burnout: ignition temperature, burn rate, burnout time, slagging tendency
  • Physical properties: density ρ\rho, viscosity ν\nu (key for heavy oil), volatility, flash point, pour point
  • Impurities/corrosiveness: SS (sulfur), ClCl, alkali metals, vanadium (heavy oil), ash softening temperature
  • Combustion limits (gas): explosion limits, flame propagation speed
  1. Basis for expressing components (must be unified first)

Common bases:

  • As-received (ar): original moisture and ash
  • Air-dried (ad): external moisture removed (lab common)
  • Dry (d): no moisture
  • Dry ash-free (daf): no moisture and no ash (for comparing combustible portion)

Typical conversions (moisture as example; mass fraction):

  • From as-received to dry: Xd=Xar1WarX_d = \dfrac{X_{ar}}{1-W_{ar}}
  • From dry to dry ash-free: Xdaf=Xd1AdX_{daf} = \dfrac{X_d}{1-A_d}